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| Syndicate: Steven Carlson: City by City: Tallinn, EE |
From: "Steven Carlson" <steve@noweurope.com>
nowEurope: City by City
A city-by-city look at who's building the European Internet
Friday, August 10, 2001
http://nowEurope.com
FIRST GLANCE
Fighting above its weight
BIRD'S EYE VIEW
Pick a number, any number
ON THE GROUND
CV-Online -- Still getting the jump
Privador -- Accidental business
Microlink -- No crown without profits
Vemis -- Wireless and moneyless
WHERE'S THE MONEY?
Rain Lohmus -- The Midas touch
AD VALUE
AdDirekt -- Biding time in a thin market
THE GURU
The prime minister's guru
ACKOWLEDGEMENTS
We value reader tips and contacts
__________________________________________________________________
FIRST GLANCE
Fighting above its weight
It lacks the bulk and bustle of Budapest or Warsaw, but
Tallinn, like most eastern European capitals, still has that
breathless feel of a city being reborn.
The little Old Town, a fairy tale maze of cobblestones and
well-preserved late-Medieval architecture, bubbles with new
cafes and restaurants. And not only the tourism industry has
blossomed. Other investments have gone into a wide variety of
sectors--everything from hi-tech and heavy industry to
brewing and retail.
While other former Soviet Bloc states have pulled in billions
from North America and the larger EU countries, especially
Germany, Estonia has thrived on Scandinavian and Finnish
investment. Tallinn is, in effect, a satellite of Helsinki,
which lies just 80 km across the Bay of Finland.
It may be that proximity that has created one advantage over
its eastern European neighbors. Not only has Tallinn received
multinational corporate investment, but it has also been
inundated by Finnish entrepreneurs, providing small business
models and inspiration to their Estonian cousins. German and
Austrian entrepreneurs simply have not shown the same
enthusiasm for entering Polish, Czech or Hungarian markets,
and those countries have suffered for it.
Another plus: In the early 1990s newly independent Estonia
jettisoned not only Soviet rule but also the corpus of Soviet
administration, creating a legal structure and agencies for
executing it largely from scratch. The period of
under-regulation and sparse bureaucracy that followed allowed
for an explosion of small business activity. That transition
could also have proven dangerous, but, remarkably, Estonia
has emerged politically and socially stable, largely
law-abiding and free of the crippling levels of corruption
and organized crime that haunt much of the former Soviet
Union.
With just 1.5 million people, Estonia will never be a
powerful market. But a testing ground for new services and
products? Yes. An outsourcing haven with an open economy and
a cheap and educated workforce? You bet. A source of
innovators and bold entrepreneurs? Just keep reading.
__________________________________________________________________
BIRD'S EYE VIEW
Pick a number, any number
Let's face it, statistics on internet penetration are often
quite useless. Even surveys using the same definition of
internet "access" find curiously disparate results. Thus the
importance of comparing results from several surveys across
several countries.
Unfortunately, there aren't many that include Estonia.
The only recent one found by nowEurope was conducted in 36
countries in March and April by TNS Interactive. It reports
that 29% of adults in Estonia are online, an excellent result
among eastern European countries but fairly mediocre compared
to most in western Europe.
The Estonian government, on the other hand, reports internet
penetration at 38%. The difference can be attributed to the
latter figure's inclusion of children, as all school children
in Estonia have internet access.
Estonia, in fact, claims not only that 100% of its schools and
government offices are connected, but that 80% of businesses
have access as well. And if that's anywhere near to being
accurate, then Estonians have, indeed, moved ahead of most
western European countries in preparing for widespread, and
value-creating use of the internet.
More verifiable, Estonians have taken up mobile telephony with
gusto. The government reports that 40% of the population hold
mobile phones. The country seems to have benefited not only by
adopting Scandinavia's enthusiasm for wireless, but has also
gotten the typical boost from wireless' arrival before a modern
and comprehensive fixed-line infrastructure was built.
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eMarketer -- the world's leading provider of Internet statistics
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__________________________________________________________________
ON THE GROUND
CV-Online -- Still getting the jump
It's a typical story. A purely web-based company gets a jump on
the traditional players in its sector by grabbing the first
wave of online customers. But, eventually, the grown-ups invest
in technology and, with their experience and power, run past
the new economy kids.
Looking for an exception?
Jurgen Tamm, 28, started CV-Online, a web-based recruitment
firm while still a student in 1997, along with Juri Kaljundi
and Rondel Min, each 26.
By advertising at the Technical University and partnering with
Estonia's busiest portals, the company began building a solid
database of job seekers. Attracting employers to the service
took longer, but business eventually took off as internet
penetration and awareness soared in Estonia in 1998-99.
By the end of 1999, CV-Online had revenues of USD 45,000 a
month and was solidly in the black. Tamm and team knew it was
time to expand.
In February 2000, they raised USD 350,000, half of that from
Esther Dysen. ("It's like a magic word," says Tamm. "You say
'Esther Dysen' and doors just open.") CV-Online then opened
operations in Riga (Latvia), Prague, Budapest, Warsaw, Vilnius
(Lithuania) and Moscow in the next five months. With expansion
on track, they raised EUR 1.5 million more in February 2001,
including money from 3i subsidiary 3TS Venture Partners, and
added an office in Bucharest.
The group now has 200,000 registered users. Projected revenues
for 2001 are USD 2.3 million. Employers can select a range of
services, from posting job ads and performing a one-time search
of the database, to continual access via subscription.
But now is when the big boys should steamroll in, right? Not in
central Europe and, apparently, not in recruiting. The dot-com
crash has prevented Monster.com from rolling out in the region.
And the traditional recruiting firms, many of whom have a
strong presence in the region (including Monster's parent TMP
Worldwide)? Says Tamm, "They are moving very slowly in taking
up technology."
That has given CV-Online time not only to extend their
technological advantage, but also close the gap in providing
traditional services. So, rather than being muscled out,
they're muscling in. "Basicly, we're evolving into a
traditional recruiting company built on technology," Tamm says.
They've also hired a CEO with management experience on the
traditional side of the industry, Scotsman Norie Sinclaire, who
is CV-Online's elder statesman at 34.
In the meantime, CV-Online has 18 people working full time on
product development. In September, in fact, they plan to
introduce an ASP-based product called Selector. It's designed
to make recruitment faster and more effective by providing
tools for profile specification, candidate sourcing, automatic
ranking, pre-screening, testing, interviewing, short-listing
and candidate communication, as well as storing strong
candidates for future projects. Annual subscriptions will sell
for USD 12,000-15,000.
Finally, the group is moving to tap the demand for IT and tech
workers in western Europe. The company will soon launch
CV-Europe, a database of CVs in English (others are in the
local language, though searches can be done in English) of job
seekers from across central Europe.
In the long run, Tamm confesses that he and his pals will
probably cash out from CV-Online when their investors exit,
either through a strategic buyout or an IPO. That's not right
around the corner, but Tamm says he'll be eager to try
something else. "We've made one good example of what
entrepreneurs here can do. Why not prove to the world that we
can do it again."
No word on what that might be, but it'll be worth watching.
<http://www.cv.ee>
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Privador -- Accidental business
We all know that scientists from the former Soviet Bloc can be
impressively skilled, and dirt cheap. What they generally are
not, however, is entrepreneurial.
Sometimes, however, opportunity knocks and someone answers the
door.
The group that eventually became Privador, first came together
when the Estonian Academy of Science's Institute of Cybernetics
formed its Division of Infosecurity in 1992, headed by Tarvi
Martens. By 1996, the institute no longer existed. But the
Infosecurity division had been so busy with government
contracts, it carried on as a small private company,
Cybernetica.
The company served just about every sizeable government agency
with a computer network and a security need, and not only with
fundamental services. Marten's team developed products that
were sometimes better than much more expensive western
solutions. In 1995, before the term "virtual private network"
(VPN) had entered the popular lexicon, Cybernetica had its own
version. The Estonian Foreign Ministry uses it today to connect
all its embassies within a highly secure, low maintenance
network.
Cybernetica's reputation slowly grew throughout the Baltics,
attracting more interest from the private sector. Finally, last
year, the company relaunched itself as Privador. "We didn't aim
to be entrepreneurs," says CFO Indrek Kasela. "But we were so
successful in this market, it was absurd not to bring it to a
wider market."
So far so good. The company needed and raised a relatively
small amount of money (USD 240,000) that went into marketing
and product development. Privador is on target in the current
fiscal year to hit EUR 1 million in revenues, with losses of
around USD 175,000. Revenues should ramp up next year, with
partners now selling Privador products in Germany, France,
Italy and the Benelux countries. The company is also looking
into forming a joint venture in Japan.
In addition to the VPN, secure e-mail and firewall products,
Privador also has a package of products for creating,
maintaining and verifying digitally signed documents, including
time-stamping and electronic notary services. The time-stamping
product incorporates an innovative concept that Privador has
patented in the US. It links digitally signed documents in a
recorded sequence, in case the absolute time (the real time and
date) is incorrectly recorded--accidentally or purposely.
Of course, Privador continues to keep getting work from the
government. In fact, it will provide the public key
infrastructure necessary for the government's 2003 rollout of
digital ID cards (see LAW & ORDER).
But the company is banking mostly on the belief that corporate
spending on electronic security will leap dramatically. Kasela
points to a study by market researcher Gartner predicting
average corporate spending on information security will jump
ten-fold by 2011.
Privador is moving out of cozy little Estonia, where
connections have helped as much as talent. But if such a
prediction comes true, there'll be plenty of demand. And
Privador, with its costs so far below western European
players', should be able to cash in.
<http://www.privador.com/index2.phtml>
<http://www4.gartner.com/Init>
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Microlink -- no crown without profits
Allan Martinson, head of Estonia's Microlink, is the would-be
king of IT and new media in the Baltics. Unfortunately, the
empire he commands is piling up red ink at an alarming rate.
Martinson, 34, rose to prominence with Baltic News Service, a
company he helped found while still a computer science student
in Moscow in 1990. Now it's the largest news service in the
Baltics. Along the way, he also became a board member at
Microlink, then chiefly a PC assembly and sales company.
In 1998, Microlink made him CEO to oversee the company's merger
with Astrodata, Estonia's second largest IT company. Since
then, Martinson has captained an aggressive drive to expand and
diversify Microlink.
Today the Microlink group includes 28 companies with projected
consolidated revenues of more than USD 50 million for fiscal
year 2001 (ending June 30). Its subsidiaries include the
leading computer sellers in Estonia and Latvia, the leading web
portals across the Baltics (Delfi), Estonia's top systems
integrator and the leading ISP in all three Baltic markets.
But Microlink is bleeding money. Though PC sales are bringing
in profits, the group posted losses of USD 2.4 million, almost
half of that from Delfi alone, in fiscal year 2000. And there's
more of the same this year, with Delfi piling up USD 840,000 in
losses in the first nine months of fiscal 2001.
What's gone wrong? Defli marketing chief Allan Sombri says,
nothing. He insists the company is on track for profits come
2003, and has simply been in an expensive expansion phase. "It
was chaos. Now we're putting the mess in order and cutting the
foggy costs."
But Delfi needs new means for creating revenues. So far, it
relies mostly on advertising (60% of Delfi's revenues), with
some curious practices, at that. Banner advertisers pay a daily
rate, instead of a per impression rate. Other revenues come
through deals with commercial content providers, including
online real estate, travel and auction services. But Delfi,
like other portals, will have to add more of these, finding new
ways of coaxing its customers to spend and not just gaze at
banner ads.
Otherwise, Martinson might never get his crown.
<http://www.microlink.com>
<http://www.delfi.ee>
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Vemis -- Wireless and moneyless
When Uku Kuut and his wife Katri Ristal first moved outside
Tallinn, in 1992, the waiting list for getting a telephone was,
at least in theory, 25 years long.
Kuut then set out on a determined quest to find a way of
connecting Estonia's unwired masses, knowing that a business
opportunity lay in the solution. Soon after, Estonia's telecom
monopoly was privatized and jumped on the same path.
Like Kuut, Eesti Telecom decided laying copper was too
expensive and looked to wireless ideas. What they settled on,
to the delight of those who just wanted phones, and to the
frustration of those who wanted to surf the net or transmit
data, was to put residential "fixed" phones onto local GSM
loops. That, of course, means 9.6 Kbps.
Kuut found something different: the open access wireless
frequency at 2.4 GHz, capable of carrying data at the
rocket-fast rate of 11 Mbps. A subscriber would need only an
on-site transmitter/receiver wired to whatever devices needed
to be online, including telephones and computers. That was the
starting point of Vemis, of which Vistral is now CEO, with Kuut
acting from its advisory board.
Vemis's pilot projects were built for Estonia's two largest
ISPs in 1998-2000. The company then began selling directly to
residential and commercial clients. In 2000, Vemis applied for
and won a license to provide the same service on a 3.5 MHz
frequency that was less prone to interference and covers a
wider radius from one antenna.
All this might have been enough to sign on loads of customers,
including companies looking for the fat pipe and residential
customers whose only other option is GSM-speed phones.
But Vemis has two problems. Eesti Telecom have introduced ADSL
service that, at 256 Kbps, is still not nearly as fast as
Vemis' service, but comes at the low-ball price of USD 35 per
month. That has forced Vemis to lower their price. But since
Vemis has to buy USD 700 worth of equipment for every customer,
it badly needs financing before it can sign up waiting
customers.
Which brings us to the second problem: Vemis is having trouble
raising funds. "We could add 10 residential customers a day if
we had the funding," says Ristal.
The lack of funding is frustrating not only because Estonians
have signaled their desire for the service, but, says Kuut,
because the technology could prove successful elsewhere,
especially in the Third World, where telecoms rarely lay new
copper and companies have even more difficulty getting
affordable broadband access.
But Vemis has another trick up their sleeve that might sway
investors. Kuut has used a combination of the 3.5 and 2.4 GHz
frequencies to create what he calls "hot spots." They are
always-on wireless zones with a radius of about 300 meters.
With a transmitter/receiver that slots into a laptop, palmtop
or PDA (and the software, of course), the device has instant
broadband access to the web as soon as it enters a hot spot
without any need to log on. Gone would be the days of looking
up out-of-town access numbers and wondering what bandwidth you
might get.
Vemis has built three pilot hot spots in Tallinn already,
covering the airport and two hotels.
Eventually, Kuut sees hot spots converging with GPRS and UMTS
mobile phone networks. Companies could sign one contract with a
service provider, allowing their employees wireless broadband
access whenever they are inside a hotspot--including, perhaps,
at the office--but also access to the network via mobile phone
or wireless modem when outside the hot spots.
Now where are those investors?
<http://www.vemis.net>
__________________________________________________________________
WHERE'S THE MONEY?
Rain Lohmus--the Midas touch
Study Rain Lohmus' c.v. and you can read the history of banking
in post-Soviet Estonia. These days he's turning his Midas touch
to tech-targeted venture capital, which is good news for
Estonia's under-funded technology start-ups.
In 1989, at the tender age of 23, Lohmus became one of the
first employees at Estonia's new central bank. Two years later
he led a small group that founded Hansabank as a subsidiary of
the larger Tartu Kommertsbank.
With interest rates artificially low in the banking sector at
the time, Lohmus eschewed lending, pouring the bank's scant
capital instead into the foreign currency market, betting
heavily against the Russian rouble. The rouble's collapse in
late 1991 not only made Hansabank a fortune, but also damaged
or bankrupted all of Estonia's traditional banks, including
Tartu. Lohmus and company then reorganized Hansa as an
independent bank in January 1992, picked up Tartu's biggest
clients and moved aggressively into the suddenly empty lending
market.
Three more prosperous years, one public offering and a few
acquisitions later, Hansabank had become the largest bank in
the Baltics. In 1998, the founding group sold a controlling
stake to Swedbank, making Lohmus one of the richest men in
Estonia. But it also made him bored, as Swedbank shifted
Hansabank toward retail banking. So, in 1999, Lohmus left to
found an investment bank--Lohmus, Haavel & Viisemann--with
Tonis Haavel and Andres Viisemann.
In addition to performing traditional corporate financing
activity, LHV has jumped into venture capital. In 1999 LHV
invested directly into oast.ee, Estonia's first internet
auction site and CV-Online, an online recruitment firm (see ON
THE GROUND). Later that year, LHV gathered USD 4 million to
form a four-year closed fund, New Economy Ventures.
The going has, however, been slow. This year, LHV has returned
15% of the fund's capital uninvested. Still, LHV is optimistic
and looks to start afresh with a new fund now in the works.
The slump in international markets, says Lohmus, has hurt the
local financing scene by limiting exit strategies, but
otherwise has not done much damage. Almost no foreign investors
had been interested in the Baltics, anyway. So, there has been
no flight of capital.
Where does the money come from, then? Local entrepreneurs made
good, says Lohmus. Since Estonia's independence, the lack of
government bureaucracy has favored business and the creation of
wealth. "It's relatively easy to do business. Generally the
government doesn't stop you," Lohmus says.
Since Estonia's traditional banks faltered in the early 1990s,
successful entrepreneurs have filled a big gap in the financing
picture. "There still aren't many strong institutional lenders,
but the entrepreneurs have a strong network" and do a lot of
investing, Lohmus says.
And now Lohmus is doing his part to give that network more
formal avenues of investment, especially into technology.
That won't make raising funds a cake walk for technology
start-ups, even with other players, like the Baltic Small
Equity Fund targetting hi-tech as well. But given Estonia's
size, and the proportionately small sums such companies need,
LHV will likely make an impact. Especially if Lohmas' Midas
touch continues.
<http://www.lhv.ee>
<http://www.hansa.ee/en/>
<http://www.bsef.ee/eng/>
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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AD VALUE
AdDirekt -- Biding time in a thin market
Estonia impresses in so many areas related to communications
technology and the internet. But online advertising is not one
of them.
Brave then, indeed, are two Americans, Eric Kwitel, 39, and
Chuck Czepyha, 36, who run AdDirekt, a consultantcy for online
advertising and marketing. They are beginning to see signs of
life in the market, with banner clients like Pougeaut, Fiat,
Scanda Hotels and Estonian Airlines. But, confesses Kwitel, "If
anything, we're a bit early."
AdDirekt launched last year with a banner ad network,
co-branded with Doubleclick and running off Doubleclick's
servers. AdDirekt now also can execute email marketing
campaigns and offer advice in planning online strategies.
The first problem is Estonia's population--just 1.5 million
people. Online spending is also very low as a proportion of
total advertising spending, not even reaching 2% in 2000. And
where money is spent online, it is often done so unwisely and
without much help from the beneficiaries, like ad agencies and
websites.
Many portals, including Estonia's No. 1 site Delfi, don't
redirect ads from outside servers, either because they cannot,
or do not know it is possible. Consider also that Estonia has
no independent auditing of web traffic, so advertisers rely
solely on the site operators to tell them how many views their
ads receive. Small wonder, then, the market is stuck using day
rates, instead of a cost per impression.
Typical costs for those that do use CPMs are about $8 per CPM.
But that is squeezed drastically by some of the few bigger
spenders, who exploit the relatively unsophisticated operators
to get rates sometimes down to $2 per CPM.
"The websites, for the most part, are not created by media
companies," says Kwitel. Often site operators are pure techies
and don't have the experience to negotiate with banks and
telcos. So, they just take what they are offered. "There's a
lot online, but they still don't understand marketing," he
sighs.
Then why are these two Americans banging their heads against
walls in Tallinn? "It's getting a little bit better all the
time," Kwitel says.
And Czepyha adds, "In a way, we're safe here." The market, he
says, is too small for bigger players to move in and start
throwing around money. And with just a four-man operation in a
small, undistinguished office space, they're keeping their
costs very low. "We're probably the leanest online company in
Estonia," says Kwitel.
The pair seem resolved to stick it out until Estonia's
promising embrace of the internet makes its inevitable impact
in the media market. Then they'll be well placed to grow a
little bit fatter.
<http://www.addirekt.com>
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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__________________________________________________________________
LAW & ORDER (and THE GURU)
The prime minister's guru
At 36, Linnar Viik is responsible for guiding one of the
world's most ambitious national plans for embracing digital
communication.
The founder of one of Estonia's first ISPs, Viik sold his
shares in 1999 to be a house-husband, taking care of his now
two-year-old son. Today, he works from home as an advisor to
Estonian Prime Minister Mart Laar. In that role, he is the
driving force behind an effort to make tiny Estonia the most
connected country on Earth.
Already, the plan is delivering savings and improving
government services. But it is also guided by a vision and
understanding of information technology and its ability to
bolster democracy that, in the long haul, may produce the
biggest dividends.
In truth, Estonia is seizing upon a set of opportunities that
make its e-mission a lot easier than in most countries. First,
it's small. With a population of only 1.5 million, a decisive
central government can roll things out quickly. Second, it
achieved independence only 10 years ago, and in doing so
discarded much of the previous (Soviet) administrative
structure.
Starting from scratch brings a chance to create, as opposed to
tinkering with a flawed inheritance. That applies equally to
everything from building physical infrastructure to setting the
tone and philosophy of government. "It was very much a tabula
rasa," says Viik.
From the start, IT strategy was centralized. All government
agencies were expected to implement progressive directives from
the prime minister's office on adopting technology. For
example, email was quickly established as dominant method of
communication throughout the government, from the Border Guard
to the Ministry of Finance.
Then came Tiger Leap, the initiative to connect every Estonian
school, no matter how small or isolated, to the internet. Tiger
Leap takes much of the credit for the fact that 85% of
Estonians aged 15-29 have online access. And the program isn't
stopping there. The program is now pushing schools to make use
of what's out there, urging the adoption of more and more
online curriculum, especially interactive educational content.
More recently, Estonia's cabinet has gone paperless. Since last
August, all drafting of legislation within and among ministries
is prepared electronically. Proposed laws or decrees are
discussed in the cabinet room in front of computer monitors.
Traveling ministers can access the system remotely and
participate with an audio hook-up. Approved bills are forwarded
to parliament electronically where they are, alas, still
printed on paper.
According to Viik, savings in A4 paper costs alone will pay for
the technical costs of the system by October of this year. And
that doesn't count other benefits.
Like transparency. On average, it takes less than 90 seconds
for any cabinet decision--being already in electronic form--to
make it to the government's website from the time the gavel
drops in the cabinet room. And thanks to Estonia's liberal
public information statutes, the process of excluding
government decisions from the public record, according to Viik,
is difficult and, itself, relatively transparent.
The government is also working to establish a virtual
marketplace that will consolidate mundane government purchasing
needs and eventually allow private sector buyers to join in.
Further from the center, numerous government agencies are
putting more and more information and services online. Already,
any government form imaginable can be downloaded
electronically, though only a few can be filled out and filed
back electronically.
But the tax office is getting there. Last year, 36,000
Estonians (12% of all those obliged) filed their tax forms
online. Companies can also file VAT declarations online.
What's next? Internet access is about 38%, according to the
government, but the growth rate has slowed. So, the government
has backed a new, privately-funded plan called "Look @ the
World" with the ambitious goal of achieving 74% penetration
(who knows where this figure comes from) within three years.
Seven major Estonian companies, led by banks, telecoms and
computer makers, have donated USD 14 million to finance public
internet access facilities, pay for training and educational
projects and cut costs on equipment purchases for small
businesses and families.
Finally, there is the plan to issue digital ID cards to every
resident of Estonia beginning next year. Under the legislation
making its way towards parliament now, only identity
information found on a passport will be stored on the card, but
it will enable several other neat tricks.
Holders will use it to apply a digital signature to electronic
documents, make electronic transactions more secure and obtain
or grant access to information about themselves stored in any
public registry (for example, to give a doctor access to
personal medical records).
Some observers are already arguing this raises the specter of
Big Brother, but the reality may be quite different. Estonia's
government is not planning to collect any information on
citizens it doesn't already collect. And by digitizing and
consolidating it, authorities can more easily control access.
Today, innumerable government workers have discreet access to
many a confidential paper file, be it criminal, medical or
financial records. But Estonia's digital depositories will
automatically detect any access (excluding the most savvy
hacker's) and record whether it was authorized or not. A data
protection agency will be charged with making random checks and
investigating complaints.
Far from raising an undemocratic bogeymen, in fact, Estonia's
e-drive is rooted in an impressive understanding of
technology's place in creating transparency and bolstering
democracy. Look no further than Viik's three official areas of
expertise. After internet issues and research and development
there is this: civil society. That's right, the hi-tech guru
has a mandate to whisper in the prime minister's ear his
philosophy on bringing power to the people.
Says Viik, "It's always been a triple goal. IT is a tool for
making public administration more efficient. It's a tool for
business to be competitive on a global scale, and it's a tool
for society.
"The generation that is now 15-29 years old, in 20 years will
play a major role in government and business. And the way that
generation gathers information and communicates, the way they
will approach openness and transparency will be radically
different from the current generation."
Perhaps here it's important to make one thing clear. It is not
technology, but the attitude of exploiting technology to
achieve greater openness that can deliver higher quality
democracy to Estonia. Meanwhile, there is Singapore, another
small country aiming to be No. 1 in e-government and in public
connectivity. And it has a lot more money to make it happen.
But it is also ruled by an autocracy obsessed with controlling
information.
So, who is really leading the way, Estonia or Singapore?
<http://www.esis.ee/index_eng.html>
(European Survey of Information Society)
<http://www.riik.ee/en/valitsus/> (government site)
__________________________________________________________________
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
nowEurope would like to thank the following people for their
assistance in making this issue possible:
Illimar Matus of the Baltic Small Equity Fund
__________________________________________________________________
MASTHEAD
Copyright 2000-2001 nowEurope Publications
Published by Steven Carlson <steve@noweurope.com>
Edited by Christopher Condon <chris@noweurope.com>
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